Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 1929 YOUNG WORKERS. ARRESTED BY U.S, ARMY OFFICERS, GirlsDistributeLeaflets GAFE WORKERS. ANSWER APPEAL TO JOIN UNION Get 35 Cents Hour,Meal | es §1R GEORGE PAISH NO PARADES FOR | SEES NEW GRISIS. THE UNEMPLOYED FOR CAPITALISM POLICE DECLARE British “Eoconomist” |Musicians Protest Loss s to Ride the Tiger Everybody Want: Cops Aid Trotskyites, Beat Up Work é to Servicemen 0 the more 8 nen had given published in the were worried. very t servicemen dership of evicted. mm out of the hall by the police. 0 show orker being Unions of the Bourgeoisie, The Bosses’ Association ‘ Predicts Crash LONDON, England, March 20,— overnor of the London »f Economics yesterday fore- s erash of international pro- | This time Sir George was arguing for free trade before the National Free Trade Conference at Manches- | — ‘ter yesterday. A year ago the same economist foresaw the same collapse but then he was arguing for pro-j tection. protected, he urged at that time, a mendous financial collapse is in- Unless British industry is |" of Jobs in Movies | Police Commissioner Whelen's de- | Protective Union at 210 E. 86th St. to the offices of Local 802 of the American Federation of Musicians have shown much apathy in the fight to take care of those workers thrown out of jobs by sound devices or are unemployed in other ways, y arranged for the police to the parade. 6000 at Meeting. A meeting was held yesterday, When George Washington OL vany, head of Tammany Hall, re- cussing the question of who is to be boss of Tammany Hall, with John F. Curry, right, one of the leaders. sachem takes place tomorrow, Election of the new chief MINE FAMILIES SHIVER IN HUTS: “I note with deep satisfaction that you are presenting to America the cinema production of. ‘A Visit to | Soviet Russia,’” declares the world famous novelist, Henri Barbusse, in « letter received by the Provisional Committee of the Friends of the 'U. S. S. RB. 1 Union Square. of Left-Overs Slavery for 12 to 14 hours a cay + League | Predicting that the world “is threat-|partment refused permission to un- ade maid A ieee at ew days ago, there was @ general stampede junder a nerve racking speedup sys- rous by the] with the gravest financial |employed musicians to parade yes-| 0 district leade i others for his job. At least three factions were | tem, 35 cents an hour for irregular the dificars it has cver seen,” Sir George|terday from the Musical Mutual uncovered, Here you see County Clerk Thomas F. Farley, left, dis- work, hastily eaten meals of left- overs—these are the conditions forced on hotel and restaurant work- ers, according to reports told yester- Officers | 3 in the spring. at 250 W. 57th St. in protest day by dishwashers, cooks, counter- rm of her | er Labor Temple, re the Troiskyite | he present policy of protection |ngainst their jobs being ‘taken x S men and bus-boys at the office of were then| "eves anders against the Soviet Union and the or safeguarding means the suicide |through the installation of “talkies” Barbusse Praises Soviet the Hotel, Restaurant and Cafeteria | Commu International, Tuesday night, they were thrown out of \of the world,” he said. “Nothing can jin 4hoving picture houses, without | Workers Branch of the Amalga- ae hall with the aid of a large police force. Whenever a worker in \be done now to prevent a financial |any arrangement being made for the . _ | mated zoe Workers Union. Thru- the room where the meeti on aroce to expose the lies | crash.” sausicians. F; 1 t b Sh S di “Y) out the day the offices of the union, of the Cannon-Abern-Schachtman clique, they w y : Many members of the union be- 1 m 0 e Own un a which has just launched an inten- ced upon by the thugs called to defend the m Gkonyes: eeMebe lieve that officers of Local 802, who e sive organizational drive, were crowded with the workers who told bitter stories of broken health, kid- ney trouble, neuritis—occupational diseases of the trade. Hundreds reg- istered for union membership. Shop committees in over 50 cafe- terias have been established. Further plans for the drive will be outlined Le: i. | evitable. anyway, at Local 802 headquarters | Rygh Contributions, Is} “Everyone, without exception, who at a mass meeting to be held at “Don’t you know you can be de-| | ie z iene to consider unemployment. About is interested in the Russia of the Bryant Hall, 41st St. and Sixth Av., country for this?” | By JOSEPH COHEN. again in Bonnett’s reactionary treat-| y,, Glibness of “Economist.” « /¢00 union members were there, The W. I. R. Appeal proletarian revolution, should see Wednesday, March 27. the officers demanded, despite the (Continued) lao whabamseane at While the crash certainly lies officials delivered a few speeches, this remarkable picture,” says Bar-} A squad of 50 cafeteria workers fact that both of the young Commu-| The bosses’ associations vary con- :: cc PY ahead of capitalism, tho not in International President Webber ap-| Lack of clothing has compelled||usse in his letter. “It will thrill distributed leaflets urging a fight nists were born in the state of Colo-|Siderably, in magnitude, structure, CU" Worthy _ex-Se of Com-|just the way Sir George predicts, peared to defend himself against miners’ children to stay in shacks|friends of the Soviet Union and |for union conditions in the garment rado. After threats and attempts | territory covered, etc, ranging from ce, Herbert Hoover.* We may |the glibness with which the learned |the statement made by a musician ‘all winter, states a letter received strike conviction even to the hearts section restaurants yesterday, Al- , the officers re- . The arrest by mili- y authorities was illegal, and they did not dare let the matter re- ceive publicity and become known to more servicemen. NANKING.HANKOW BATTLE FOUGHT small, local trade organizations to huge, powerful national units. A the case of everything which bears su the genuine stamp of the bourgeoisie, chaos reigns supreme here. Many associations cover only a certain sily comprehend that this refusal n information is not a re- . Whate its short- , the American bourgeoisie, which is noted for its sagacity, can economist can shift his point of view suggests that his opinion is venal and his present utterances have something to do with drum-, ming up liberal ballyhoo for the) coming general elections. through the Daily Worker that! Webber himself owns stock in movie sound device companies, and several | members spoke, Members of the union have been attacking the officials for their in- at the national office of the Work- ers’ International Relief, 1 Union Sq., from Thomas Rodgers, secre- tary-treasurer, District 2, National Miners’ Union, Portage, Pa., Rose Pastor Stokes, acting secretary, W. oi its enemies, This film, crowded with action, gives the onlooker the feeling of actual contact with every part of Russia in every phase of its social, political and industrial life. No one should miss it.” though the manager of the Sun Ray Cafeteria, 36th St. and Sixth Ave., sought to oust the distributing |squad which included Harry Eis- man, a member of the Young Com- : ee ef “s fs munist League, most of, the leaflets trade in a given city or town; others 7°t be accused of laziness. This is, activity. In the meeting yesterday I. R., stated last night. “A Visit to Soviet Russia” will were distributed and every store in cover only a certain part of a trade, "ther, a result of “diplomatic Webber’ continued his attitude cf) «t may state for publication,”| play at the Waldorf Theatre, 60th the section was covered, as, eg,, the so-called “small” and “large” associations of the furriers (employers) of New York; still others cover entire industries. Some include no more than a city, others —entire stat There are some that cover a little more, or a little maneuvers.” But we shall have oc- casion later to discuss this, as well as their secret activities in general. A second cause of confusion to the statistician is the di ity in the official names of 1.» associations, Many of them, instead of employing SYMPATHITER OF STRIKERS FINED pessimism, saying that he did not | know of anything to advise the members of the union to do to fight unemployment. The officials are on the defensive against charges by the members of the union. Members at this meeting put for- Rodgers writes, “that in Fallen-Tim- |ber, Pa., there are children who have | not been out of their homes all win- ter according to reports received last week, It is on account of not hay- ing any clothing and shoes. In Beav- erdale the same conditions prevail. St. east of Broadway, Sunday, from 2 p.m. to 11 p. m., with four con- tinuous performances. This is the only day in which this picture will be shown in this city. Gala Dance Tomorrow less, than one city. Thi eas shi ef . | ward the following demands, among | a), t Soi , wh th Southern Leader Calls portant. ones, Hewes «act Saad ake meinen (682) TRG alte: Jer sey Judge Jaws: others: Five-day week, seasonal con- eingpeck tebe aten duaieak chthe 4 N d for New Government. |°2™¢ ¢x¢eptions) the national asso- ployers’ Association of such and tracts, union control of all jobs, one militant National Miners’ Union, Night for Negro an (Continued from Page One) time, those associated with him in the Kuomintang, 35 threatening to bolt also. 7 * SHANGHAI, March 20.—General Feng Yu-hsien today refused to withdraw his resignation as minister of war, stating that his functions were no longer required since Chiang Kai-shek has independently ordered troops into Hunan. jciations, some of which pretend io cover certain trades or industries on a nation-wide scale, as, for example: the “National Metal Association” in number, are | (founded 1899), or the “National! | Erectors’ Association” (founded 1903); others attempt to combine all the industries of the nation, as, e.g.: the “National Associations of Manufacturers” (founded 1895), or the “National Industrial Conference Board” (founded 1916). | No Real Figures. How, many bosses’ associations such an industry, etc.) give them- selves names that bear no relation either to their character or to their! aims. They are known, e.g., as: leagues, clubs, committees, institutes, ete, But the work of these seem- jingly harmless clubs and institutes jentitles them to a “place of honor” jamong all the other organizations jot employ: | In justice to the associations, we should add that this camouflaging of some of them is made up for by the open and above-board cynicism “Can’t Aid Strike” ELIZABETH, N. J., March 20.—| Because he dared demonstrate his sympathy for the five months’ strike of the silk workers in Summit, by | joining them on their picket lines, | J. Glass, member of the Young Com- imunist League, was fined $15 by Judge Robbins in the Elizabeth County Court. George Hamway, striker, who had appealed with Glass 30-day sentences imposed on both in a Summit court, was given a sus- man for one job. It was decided to call a special meeting to discuss the unemploy- ment situation, and a committee is | to be elected at the next meeting to — work out plans to meet the present problems. NOW RENEGANE GETS PIE-CARD there are miners who appeal to us for help and claim that their chil- dren have no food or clothing. “Surely the workers must soon awaken to this fake prosperity in the coal-fields and come to the rescue of these thousands of families who are forbidden the right to earn a living, while the chosen few who are al- lowed to work have all their earn- ings plucked at the company stores. Shall we stand by and let humanity be driven from the earth under the Spanish Newspapers Class-conscious workers of various races will gather at Imperial Hall 160 W. 129th St., tomorrow night at on inter-racial dance for the benefit of the Daily Worker, the Negro Champion, organ of the American Negro Labor Congress, and the Vida Obrera, organ of the Spanish frac- tion of the Communist Party. of the U.S. A. Rejecting capitalist - inspired WINDOWWASHERS. NOW PICKET BANK Two Strikers Arrested for Denouncing Seabs | Two striking window cleaners arrested yesterday as they vicketed the Bowery Savings Bank buildine. 42nd St. near Lexington Ave. The workers, Leo Kimmel ond | William Boyko, members of the \ striking Window Cleaners Protective 'Union, Local 8, denouncing the use of scabs by the hank, when two policemen arrested pia : ; | " i hameful guise of prosperity?” vidi i * a It is believed that “Feng is wait- Pas ra |of others like: “The Open Shop Pended sentence ie ki Pp schemes for dividing and weakening them and took them to the 57th St. ing the result of negotiations be- That ed ple eta nce eaten Tt) Association of ‘Beaumont, Texas,” nS oie eeeee ee en he nee peadiey who wishes, sree hee the ie se pace Soe cae Negro court. where the case avainst thom . i-k % = . i“ i = eo” “Na. o the starving miners and their, workers will make the event an oc- | we ismise tween Ho Chi-kung, mayor of Pek- 1);. question, The figures furnished] National 48-hour League,” “Na. York, the judge and prosecutor es was dismissed by Judge Bushel, ing, who is reported to be effecting an agreement between the Hankow generals and Feng in’ Hankow. soe * SHANGHAI, March 20. — To- gether with reports of savage tur- moil im the interior of Shantung where péasants are attempting to fight off the ravages which the starving troops of Chang Tsung- chang are inflicting on them, dis- patches from Chefoo state that Gen- by different investigators differ so markedly as to make.:he whole mat- ter seem ridiculous. One thing’ is certain—that their number runs up into the thousands. In order to give the reader some idea of the differences that exist in the results of different investiga- tions of this subject, we may note that: | (1) According to Bonnett, the number of associations in the United tional Open Shop Publicity Bureau,” “American Plan Educational Ex- | chanrs,” ete. Constituticzs and Reality. After reading all the constitutions and other official documents of vari- ous “bosses’ associatio: s,” the unin- itiated -aight come to the conclusion | that these are organizations of ideal- |ists, of naive fanatics, and not at |all organizations of business men, stated. Failing to provide enough evidence | to hold them on a disorderly conduct | charge, the prosecutor and police} swore that the two accused had said! “scab” to a strikebreaker. Anna Ha-} rabedian and Julia Aboutok were witnesses for the defendants. The} strike was led by the National Tex- tile Workers’ Union after the Asso- ciated Silk Workers’ 5 months’ lead- | HillmanAppointsFaker to Coast Job (Special to the Daily Worker) ROCHESTER, N. Y., March 19.— Left wing members of the Amalga- mated Clothing Workers Union is- sued a warning here to the Amalga- mated members in the Los Angeles | local, telling them that the local’s new manager, appointed by Pres- whose wives and children is asked to send contribution to the Workers’ Inter- national Relief, Room 604, 1 Union Sq., New York City. PARIS STRIKERS CONTINUE FIGHT ‘casion for demonstrating their soli- | ‘darity with Latin-American, Japan- ese and Chinese workers, who will attend the dance in large numbers. John C. Smith’s Negro orchestra will play for the dancing, and ‘Marching Guns,” a Workers Labor- ‘atory Theatre production, will be a |“cature of the entertainment. Tickets may be obtained at the) office of the Negro Champion, 169 W. 188d St., at the Spanish Workers Harry Feinstein, secretary of. Lo-~ jeal 8, charged that the recent ar- jvests and brutality on the part of ithe police was part of a campaign ‘on the nart cf the open-f bosses to break the union. The strikers ere struggling for the recognition of their union, a $45 |minimum wage for a 44-hour week and for the principle of no discharge ,of workers after two weeks of em- ployment without just cause. f z pape ie ; 1 i i i ‘i ill was a faker , 1 Liu Chen. N f , |of practical employers. The well- ¢*ship had practically ruined the! ident Hillman, v : \Club, 55 W. 113th St, the Workers, The present strike started March aa fen seers Se dae awe is somewhat more than) known een ASS peaca, strike. : | betrayal of his oe nee larly (D fv Poli au 1 | Bookshon, or the District Negro! 11, sihen the Conimerclat Wintec face of Chang’s menace, has left a 000. law, ‘order, truth, God, etc. are met The International Labor Defense’ affiliations made him particularly) ety olice an 0. \Committes of the Communist Party, Jarge gap in his lines thru which | Chang may enter Chefoo without bloodshed. It is expected he will do 80 within a day or so. * * * PEKING, China, March 20.—Sun gress. The program calls for $12,- | (2) According to a report of the Secretary of Commerce (dated 1923) there are about 11,000. (3) tary of Commerce (dated 1926) sets the number at 8,778. | A later report of the Secre-| | with very often and in various con- | texts, Were we to t in good faith, we should believe that \the only aim of the American capi- talists is to establish justice among volunteered to defend the strikers and their attorney, Mordecai Seigel, zppeared in court. obnoxious to honest workers. The statement declares: The Rochester members of the A. Huge Meetings C. W. of A., want to warn all class conscious embers of the Los Angeles and other California units PARIS (By Mail).—Despite the police prohibition, the strikers of the Gnome et Rhone airplane works, | m it R y | me ‘of the union against the fake revolu-| who had turned a lockout into a Hillman’s appointment 126 Union Sq. The proletarian movement the xelf-con ous, independent movement of the immense major- ity—Karl Marx (Communist Mani- festo), in Cleaning..Company employed non- union men, The other classes decay and finally disappear in the face of modern in~ |dustry: the proletariat is its special and ersential product.—tarl Marx (Communist Man.festo). Fo, minister of railways in the Nan-| We should note here that the). °C ie, reais, . Be h : ; king government, yesterday pro-| discrepancy between the two re-| 2° Poo aneol TCE ene vee they \tionist and renegade whom Mr. Hill- |strong and lasting strike, and work- a isoad’ and ros Pais ports of the Secretary of Commerce | Most secret of these a ice! man has just made manager of Los crs of the Regina-Malakov metal fil posed a@ railroad and road building é us PT aT “The League for Industrial Rights,” | Nutat works he’ i =f Call : | trict. vorks held huge demonstrations be program to the Kuomintang con- Should not be taken as an indication NaDee'-in the . nese obte idatdears AL, i *| Angeles district. ‘ | LAST 2 DAYS! of a decrease in the actual number} |) °° 2 tHe Mame of justice. of Louis fore the plants, | cinema e | 500,000,000 expenditure, The atti- tude of the congress was not re- of associations. result of the This is simply a confusion which for though the attitude toward the pro- letariat is not the same in the vari ous documents, there is one point ‘New Group Opposes) Stark is in reward for Stark’s be- trayal of the workers’ interests, for | Foundry workers, meeting in the workers’ clubs, prepared plans for PRESENTS [a “The most remarkable film of the machine age ever produced” vealed. various reasons has entered into fapn ‘to'all of kiaveoan Il at. his desertion of the revolutionary jcontinuing the strike and relief —says L’Humanite, the French SAS Nene these investigations. We shall call | (on gia cites is ns ee fede the Smith and Walker workers’ cause for the sake of the work for the strikers. 3 Communist Dally The Dictatorship of the ProletaHtat attention here to two of these P 08 NS ae ‘Wikies as Ws job, and for his open support of| When the 3,000 workers of the fm the fiercest ane mos? merefle ar of the new class against its more erful enemy, the bourgeoisie, whose power of resistance increases tenfold after its overthrow, even though overthrown in only one coun- | reasons: | 1—Many associations give no answer to the inquiries of the De- partment of Commerce; they refuse, in general, to give any information |existence of the bosses’ associations lon the basis of self-defense simply of a desire for, justice. .,, | One who is not very gullible, hdw- jever, may without difficulty get at ec kernel of truth which is hidden (- The “Third Party” in the fight {among bosses inside of the Tam- many Hall organization moved yes- terday to restrict the choice, and at- tack the Smith faction, which talks every reactionary measure and ter- rorist policy used by Hillman against the members of the organ- ization. Knows Left Phrases. plane works first advanced their de- mand for an increase in wages of 3 (cents per hour the employers not only refused to grant it, but de- manded that the workers work over- “THE MARCH OF THE MACHINES” --a powerful and rhythmic close-up of modern “civili- zation” produced by Eugene Deslaw, a Russian director —AND ON THE SAME PROGRAM— “LOOPING THE LOOP” ‘i F Ain : ‘i the sensational successor to “Variety” with WERNER concerning. their activities. This ; rh Stark pretends to be a revolution- | tine, i : ty try—V. I. Lenin (“Lett” if : , ‘ F 5 OTT “ mm : . KRAUS of “Caligari” fame in an original and striking nism). cain Tete” Commu | cocrecy is poinied out again and|by this thick shell of discredited /nicely of a “new Tammany,” mean-|;/ "At ‘one time he was with the ‘ohtracterinatioye capt kaka EXPLORE USSR MINERAL MakeValuableScientitic Finds in Siberia MOSCOW (By Mail)—The vast] Another ‘expedition exploring the stretches of the Soviet Union, many |Kolyma River, in Asiatic Russia, parts of them unexplored and a mys- tery as far as maps go, unknown for all the mineral wealth they may hold and the huge store of material for science, are now being system- atically explored by Soviet scien- tists, The scientific institutes have been sending out expeditions of archeolo- gists, minerologists and geolugists, and these expeditions have already brought in notable resulis, beth of scientific and practical value. Gorbunoy, the Soviet scientist who Jed the Soviet-German expedition in- _ to the far wastes of Pamir, reported results of great value which may lead to a systematic exploitation of the mineral wealth in that section. He reports, for instance, that the expedition discovered huge gold- fields and nitre deposits in Pamir. and, as proof of his assertions, he has brought back with him 18,000 specimens of minerals. Penetrating far into the unknown territory, the expedition explored the Tanymas z for the first time and dis- covered 27 glaciers, previously un- at the height of more than meters above sea-level. The entists also collected samples of _eultivated plants and local grades _ of wheat, and drew up a dictionary the Tadjik dialects. (discovered that the upper reaches of this river are within 300 kilo- | meters nearer the Okhotsk Sea than \is shown on the map. They also [found that navigation conditions | | were good all along the length of | the river to its very source. This discovery. will make life leasier in that faraway region, for ‘it will now be possible to supply its inhabitants with all necessary sup- | plies by means of the river during |the spring and summer. A salt lake in Central Asia, lo- jeally known as Ala-Kul, containing many valuable minerals and fea- tures of scientific importance. had remained unknown to the world un- til recently, when the Soviet geolo- |gist, Yakovley, discovered it. It lies |in the region bounded by the River |Chu and Lake Balkhash. Seaweeds deposited on the banks of this salt jlake form a wax-like substance ‘which, upon being distilled, yields kerosene, benzine and other oil prod- ucts, This is the only place cn the world’s surface where the formation of a bituminous substance of the character of wax and oil is proceed- ling constantly, waiting to be used in large quantities. sete | phrases, namely: the attempts of the \capitalists, already pointed out at |the beginning of this article, to an- |tagonize the masses to the idea of | the class-struggle. (The End.) In his preface to the book- ed by the Department of |Commerce, March 1, 1926, Hoover | says: “There are, of course, many in- acouracies, since many organizations, |to which questionnaires were sent, | did not respond to repeated requests for information.” \Lore’s Yellow Tabloid |Admits Cannon Called Police Against Workers The (Trotskyist) German ‘organ, the renegade, Ludwig Lore, admits, in its issue of yesterday, that James P. Cannon and his cronies called in the police, in addition to his thugs, to attack militant workers at his meeting Tuesday night at the Labor Temple, 14th St. and Second Ave. It also insinuates that the work- ers who were put out started a fire. This framed-up accusation is con- sidered Ly workers typical of at- tacks being made by the Cannon- Lore group and accords well with their utilization of gangsters, police and detectives, WANAMAKER’S FORTUNE PHILADELPHIA, March 20.— Rodman Wanamaker, New York end Philadelphia merchant, who died “New York Volkszeitung,” edited by | ing to put itself in control of the’ graft machine. The “Third Party”) move is also to slap back at Mayor Walker, who called a meeting yes- terday and told the political leaders | that they would have to put in some-| body friendly to the mayor of New) York. ’ ‘ The fight is about who will take | the leadership of Tammany Hall, | and be the most famous political boss! in. the United States. The “Third Party” is made up of all the district leaders, members of the Tammany executive committee. The “Third| Party” is united against Smith and/ |Walker, more or less, but it is badly | ‘divided over the question of who is} going to be chief boss of Tammany ‘Hall. Restrict Choice. } The move yesterday was to call &| ‘meeting of the executive committee | for today, to formally restrict the | \ehoice to a member of that commit-| tee. Then>they will fight and in-| trigue among themselves until to- morrow afternoon when the vote for ileader has to be taken. | Indications are that the first choice iwill be Martin G. McCue, John F. Curry, commissioner of records, or Edwin Ahearn, municipal court clerk. None of these appeared yesterday to | have enough votes (it takes 12) to winithe coveted post. If they each refuse to yield to the other, some compromise on another man will have to be made, DIES BEFORE RESCUE. NOME, Alaska, March 20,—Dr. A. March 9, 1928, left a fortune of more |W. Newhall, the only physician in than $56,000,000, exclusive of tens Point Barrow, died of heart disease of millions of dollars of reel estate. here while a pilot fought through Trade Union Educational League. He was also a member of the Prole- ‘tarian Party, there he acquired the | revolutionary phrases which he now uses so glibly to confuse and mis- lead the workers. Four years ago tional organizership, and Stark com- pletely sold-out. Since then he has been using all he learned in the movement and the confidences he had built up to betray and mislead the workers and to build Hillman’s reactionary machine. We in Rochester have learned through bitter experience how rotten and corrupted this Stark is. We have seen him go all the way from a supporter to one of the worst fascists in the black army that is Hillman’s. The workers should con- solidate their ran‘ss and prepare to defend themselves against the nev attacks that Hillman’s new manager has been sent to launch against them. FALLS FROM TRAIN. SCHENECTADY, N. Y., March 20 (UP),—Joseph Healy, 26, Brooklyn, was critically injured today when he leaped or fell out of the window of a speeding New York Central ex- press train near Carmen, N. Y. Two brothers, who accompanied Healy, said they did not see the ac- cident. He had been suffering from ill health, they said, and was de- spondent. Healy was taken to Al- bany Hospital. No svoner in tation of the Inborer by no t the in en upon the other portious The buik of the estate is held in jan Alaskan storm io bring medical trust for Wanameker’s children, aid to him, J Ma bourgeotste, the Inndlord, the shop- | keeper. the pawnbroker, cte.—Kart Mare (Communist Manifente)s | Hillman offered him an interna- | | The management declared a lock- jeut when the workers refused, but the men refused to leave the plant until the end of the day, despite the ‘urrival of gendarmes, Workers of |the Regina-Malakov plant joined the strike immediately afterward. 2 Workers in Subway | (Hit by 200 Ib. Rock; 1 \Is Fatally Injured Also, A 200 pound bowlder. failling on | two workers on a scaffold in the) isubway excavations at Hawkstone | St: and Grand Concourse, Bronx. | ‘yesterday crushed Salvatore Care- \oza, an Italian worker, beneath it, inflicting injuries from which he will probably die, and also fractured the ankle of Arthur Gottman, a Negro worker. The two were on a scaffold 25 ifeet from the bottom of the exca- vetion and were drilling rock. There were no safety precautions ordered iby the company. A rock, against iwhich there was: no guard, suddenly fell on,the scaffold and carried both workers to the bottom. Careoza was ‘nearly buried in the falling earth \and timber. He has internal injuries | ‘and a broken spine. BIG PROFITS FOR RAILROADS Erie Railroad Company, the first jeastern road to report February jearnings, had a surplus of $697,880 ‘in February, compared with a sur- plus of only $32,892 in February, 1928. Surplus for the first two months of the year showed an even vveater improvement. totaling $1,- 189.442, ogainct a deficit of $390,675 CHARLIE CHAPLIN.in “A DAY’S PLEASURE” film gui Id cinema 52 West 8th St., bet. 5th & 6th Aves., Continuous, Popular Prices Sat. and Sun. noon to midnite—Daily 2-12 p. m.—SPRing 5095-5090 Com, Sat.: Aelita: The Revolt of the Robots—the Russian ‘R.U.R.’ vere carrying signs . - in the first two months of 1928, Rath gh ; ‘ate BIG MASQUERADE BALL FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE “UJ ELORE” —Hungarian Communist Daily— Arranged by the UJ ELORE conference with the co- operation of the New York Hungarian organizations will be held Sat. Eve., March 30th 8 P.M, at Central Opera House 67th Street and Third Avenue TICKETS in advance $1.00; at the box office $1.25. Tickets for sale at Uj Elore office, 26 Union Square, Hungarian Workers Home, Tableau from the 1919 Hungarian Revolution. (350 East 81st Street.)